What is the meaning of CU. Phrases containing CU
See meanings and uses of CU!Slangs & AI meanings
Cutesy is slang for sickenly sweet.
Cutie is slang for a person regarded as appealing or attractive, especially a girl or woman.
cube of morphine
Cutty is Dorset slang for a wren.
Cutter is British slang for a knife.
Cut−downs is slang for short trousers made by cutting the legs off longer trousers.
Cut the mustard is American slang for to come up to expectations.
(abrv.) (n.) Culinarian
Cut−offs is slang for short trousers made by cutting the legs off blue jeans.
Cuts and Scratches is London Cockney rhyming slang for matches.
Cutty sark is London Cockney rhyming slang for a police informer (nark).
Cut some slack is British slang for to give leeway, to relieve the pressure.
CUT YOURSELF A BIG SLICE OF CAKE
CUT YOURSELF A BIG SLICE OF CAKE
Cut yourself a big slice of cake is British slang for to boast, to talk highly of oneself.
Cut−purse was old slang for a pickpocket who specialised in cutting the strings tieing a purse to a belt.
Cutout is Australian slang for the end of shearing.
To cut stick is slang for to make off clandestinely or precipitately.
Passenger cars. Cushion rider may be either a passenger or member of passenger-train crew. (See varnished cars)
Cutaways is slang for short trousers made by cutting the legs off blue jeans.
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Slangs & AI derived meanings
Beggar my neighbour is London Cockney rhyming slang for on the labour (unemployed).
LSD
 Cotton or woollen cloth used to cover floors or to protect carpets.
Hope it helps
Stink−weed is slang for marijuana.
Short for Timberland boots.
Noun. A homosexual male.
Vrb phrs. To not care at all.
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a.
Cut sharply or definitely, or so as to make a clear, well-defined impression, as the lines of an engraved plate, and the like; clear-cut; hence, having great distinctness; well-defined; clear.
a.
Adapted for forming a screw by cutting; as, a screw-cutting lathe.
a.
Culminating, or coming to the meredian, at or about the same time with the moon; -- said of a star or stars, esp. of certain stars selected beforehand, and named in an ephemeris (as the Nautical Almanac), as suitable to be observed in connection with the moon at culmination, for determining terrestrial longitude.
n.
A hydrocarbon of the aromatic series, metameric with mesitylene and cumene, found in coal tar, and obtained as a colorless liquid.
a.
Cut flat on the reverse, and with a convex face formed of triangular facets in rows; -- said of diamonds and other precious stones. See Rose diamond, under Rose. Cf. Brilliant, n.
n.
Culture, training, or education of one's self by one's own efforts.
n.
A cunette.
a.
Chilling; penetrating; sharp; as, a cutting wind.
n.
One who sneaks from his cups; one who balks his glass.
n.
A caterpillar which at night eats off young plants of cabbage, corn, etc., usually at the ground. Some kinds ascend fruit trees and eat off the flower buds. During the day, they conceal themselves in the earth. The common cutworms are the larvae of various species of Agrotis and related genera of noctuid moths.
n.
Extreme republican principles; the principles or practice of the sans-culottes.
adv.
In a cutting manner.
n.
Alt. of Cuttlefish
n.
The fore part of a ship's prow, which cuts the water.
a.
Severe; sarcastic; biting; as, a cutting reply.
n.
An instrument to cut straw for fodder.
a.
Pertaining to, or involving, sans-culottism; radical; revolutionary; Jacobinical.
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